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  “None,” Lincoln said. “Yet. But there have been two missing people. We don’t know if they’re dead or if they’ve been…taken.”

  “You want to find these people?” McIntyre asked.

  It was a weird question, and equally as probing as the question about the phases of the moon. Lincoln sat back against the ripped leather bench as he considered. If he wanted to find the missing people—if they found them alive, bitten, and changed—they would have to do something about the fact that they had become werewolves. It was, at its core, a question about Lincoln's sympathies.

  For the last year, the newly-formed Office of Preternatural Affairs had taken a tough stance against all things evil and fanged. Their obvious yet unspoken policy on werewolves was toughest of all: extermination. Werewolves were already an endangered species. The OPA hoped to make them extinct.

  He couldn’t exactly disagree with the sentiment, but if the OPA learned that Grove County had a werewolf problem, they would get involved. Lincoln didn’t want an OPA office in his town. It was his county, his people, and he wasn’t going to let the feds take it from him.

  “I called you instead of the OPA for a reason,” he finally said. Let McIntyre make of that what he would.

  The fact that Lincoln wasn’t supporting their scorched-earth policies seemed to please McIntyre. “Maybe we’ll help,” he said. He pulled his girth out of the booth. “Let’s see what she thinks.”

  Lincoln glanced down at his drying khakis before rising, too. He left the tonic on the table. “Where is she?”

  “Out back.”

  He was torn between relief at leaving the stench and cacophony of The Pump Lounge behind, and trepidation at stepping out into that darkness again. He gripped the back of the booth. Dug his fingernails into the leather. Eyeballed the bent nails holding the front door closed.

  McIntyre was oblivious to his hesitation. He flicked a wave at the bartender, who was trying to drag the unconscious man off of his bar stool, and headed to the back door.

  Lincoln followed.

  The music chased them out into the cool autumn evening. The dome lights were on in one semi’s cab. He could see the forty-something woman grinding against the driver, whose head was thrown back in ecstasy. She caught Lincoln's eye through the window and winked. Then the light went off. It was so very, very dark inside.

  “Lord help me,” Lincoln said.

  McIntyre shot a look at him for that. “Careful whose name you take in vain out here. She’s not a fan.” He nodded at Lincoln's collar. “Hide that, too.”

  The deputy had forgotten that he was wearing a crucifix on a slender gold chain. He put a possessive hand over it. “Why?”

  “Just do it.”

  Thoughts of vampires and the Devil flitted over Lincoln's mind, quickly followed by the thought of all the dead people back home.

  It took two tries to work the clasp. He kissed the crucifix, said a prayer, and dropped it into his pocket.

  McIntyre led Lincoln through the darkened trucks. Some of them were shaking. He thought he heard moaning. He imagined those women turning tricks inside, and then quickly stopped himself—he didn’t know what might happen if he dwelled on the mental image of sun-leathered cleavage, French manicures, and Lucite platforms. In the vast, sagebrush-pocked night, Lincoln feared his thoughts might become tangible, take on a life of their own.

  “They won’t bother us,” McIntyre said, as if catching the tenor of Lincoln's thoughts. “Not when I’m here.”

  “What…?” Lincoln began to ask. His mouth dried.

  “Succubi.”

  “So it’s true,” he said. “Demons have infested the western states.”

  Nevada, Arizona, and Utah’s plight had been broadcast over the news networks virtually nonstop for months. The west had gone wild again. Demons owned the desert.

  Lincoln couldn’t wait to get home.

  Find the woman. He clenched his fist on the crucifix in his pocket hard enough for the corners to leave an imprint on his palm.

  McIntyre led him to a copse of Joshua trees. The Pump Lounge was reduced to a lonely red light near the highway, and Nesbitt Lake was a line of paler blue on the horizon.

  That was where they stopped.

  “Say your problem,” McIntyre said. “Loudly.”

  Lincoln looked around, confused. They were alone among the human-like figures of the trees. A breeze whispered through the sagebrush.

  “I already told you what’s going on,” he said. “Are we being watched?”

  McIntyre flicked a lighter, lit a cigarette, took a drag. “Say it.”

  Lincoln took a bracing breath. “I’m Deputy Lincoln Marshall from the Grove County Sheriff’s Department. I believe we have a werewolf problem. There have been six murders, and two people are missing. I want your help finding them.”

  He felt dumb speaking to the Joshua trees, and dumber still when there was no response.

  McIntyre tilted his head as if listening to a strain of distant music. “Who’s missing, deputy? Tell me about ‘em.”

  “A man,” Lincoln said. “Thirty-three years old. Bob Hagy.” He licked his lips to wet them, tightened his fist on the crucifix. It was so quiet out here. “And a, uh, a girl—nine years old. Lucinde Ramirez.”

  “You’re lying,” McIntyre said.

  “What?”

  “You’re lying about the victims. Lucinde Ramirez hasn’t gone missing.”

  Unease crept over Lincoln's heart. “Her disappearance has been assigned to me. That’s what it says on the report. Nine years old. Lucinde Ramirez.” McIntyre held out the cigarette as if offering it to someone else to smoke. Not Lincoln. “Why do you think I’m lying?”

  “Because she says you’re lying,” McIntyre said.

  And the cigarette suddenly wasn’t in his hand anymore.

  He hadn’t dropped it or put it out. It was pinched between his first finger and thumb one moment, and then gone the next.

  Light flared behind Lincoln, briefly splashing his shadow over the trunks of the Joshua trees.

  He turned.

  A woman stood behind him, taking a deep drag on the cigarette. The top of her head came to Lincoln's chin. Black hair was pulled back into a long ponytail, and a form-hugging tank top bared an inch of pale midriff above her belt. Her legs were encased in leather leggings and low-heeled boots. It took Lincoln a moment to look up from the alluring peek of navel to her face, and once he did, he was transfixed. Her lips were full and red. Her irises were black.

  Where the supposed succubi had been wrecked, hideous women, this creature of the night was beautiful and youthful. Ageless, almost. The Devil had taken a much more tempting form.

  Lincoln had found the woman.

  Elise Kavanagh.

  “Lucinde Ramirez has been dead for four years,” she said, flicking her thumb against the butt of the cigarette. Ash fell to the desert. “She would have been nine if she’d survived.”

  Lincoln struggled to remember how to speak.

  “That’s all I know,” he said.

  She glanced over his shoulder. “McIntyre?”

  “He seems legit to me. Up to you.”

  “Werewolves,” Elise mused. Her lips puckered around the cigarette. Lincoln was jealous of it.

  “Didn’t you have a run-in with werewolves once?” McIntyre asked, sauntering over to take the cigarette from her. He seemed comfortable with Elise, almost fraternal, as if she hadn’t appeared from nothingness outside a pit of succubi.

  “Yeah,” she said. “Long time ago in Kansas. I’m not a fan.”

  “Will you help me?” Lincoln asked.

  She walked up to him, standing close enough that their bodies nearly touched. Her head tilted back so that she could study him. It wasn’t the night that made her eyes look black. They were black, from iris to the edge of her pupils.

  Lincoln felt the strange urge to kiss her.

  He didn’t move when she reached her fingers into his shirt pocket, removed his b
adge, and studied it. She traced a fingernail over the text. Then she put it back. Her hand lingered on his chest, as if she were interested in the pounding of his heart.

  “Fine,” Elise said.

  He hadn’t been expecting that answer. After everything that Lincoln had been forced to go through to get a meeting with this woman—flying all the way to Nevada, driving out on US-93, going to that hellhole of a bar—he had been expecting an argument.

  “Really?”

  “Yes. I’ll meet you there,” Elise said.

  “Where?” Lincoln asked. “When?”

  But she was gone.

  He couldn’t have looked away for more than a half-second—the length of time it took to blink—but the woman had vanished. The cigarette smoldered in the dust at his feet. McIntyre stubbed the embers out with his toe, wiping his hands off on his jeans.

  “I’ll call you later to arrange payment,” McIntyre said. “You know it’s not free, right?”

  “I know,” Lincoln said.

  “Cool.”

  McIntyre sauntered away—not toward the bar, but toward the lake.

  Lincoln was alone, but he didn’t feel alone. Invisible eyes made his skin crawl. He put his crucifix around his neck again and walked back to The Pump Lounge, barely resisting the urge to break into a run.

  When he arrived, he found the building dark. There was no music, no shouting, no clinking of glass. He pushed the back door open.

  The stage was uninhabited, the bar was dusty, and everything was coated in sulfur.

  Empty.

  In fact, it looked like it had been empty for months. The desert had begun to reclaim the property. Cobwebs hung from the ceiling. A thick layer of dust covered the floor, which had holes the size of Lincoln's Toyota in it. The roof was rotting away.

  His heart pounded in his throat as he backtracked to his car. The trucks weren’t rocking with the ministrations of the women anymore, and Lincoln wondered if he would find dead truck drivers inside if he looked.

  He didn’t look.

  Lincoln got behind the wheel and drove.

  CHAPTER TWO

  Elise dreamed of Hell.

  She drifted over an endless wasteland. Black mountains lined the horizon, so distant that she couldn’t have reached them if she ran for a hundred years. An obsidian city belching cones of smoke, glistened underneath her. The buildings, the streets, were laid out in the pattern of a spiderweb.

  The sky was the crimson of blood spilled on lava rock. Ragged gashes in the desert flickered with occasional flame. Screams drifted on the rippling heat.

  The City of Dis. Home. Her heart ached for it.

  Elise woke up in a closet on Earth, not in Hell. It was barely big enough for her to sit inside, though her muscles registered no discomfort when she stood, using the ironing board for leverage. A clothes iron hung on the wall. Empty hangers dangled in her face.

  She stretched her arms across her chest, rolled her neck on her shoulders, and stepped into the motel room.

  “This is a bad idea,” Anthony Morales said by way of greeting.

  He sat on the end of Elise’s bed. She hadn’t slept in it once during her stay at the motel, but evidently he had; the imprint of a pillow still marked his left cheek. He was shirtless, shamelessly revealing the sculpted planes of his chest, and his muscular thighs were accentuated by snug gray boxer-briefs.

  Anthony and Elise used to date, although “date” wasn’t the best descriptor of their former relationship. Elise had used him for sex. He had pined for her love. Unsurprisingly, she had ended up breaking his heart—but more surprisingly, he had come back, and their friendship had been the better for it.

  He was now Elise’s eyes during the day, though he often slept through afternoons so he could help her hunt at night. And he already had the coffee brewing for her. Good man.

  Fading daylight touched the edges of the motel curtains. A single sunbeam splashed on the wall behind her. Elise avoided it as she went to the coffee maker, tugging her underwear out of the cleft of her ass. Black lace—why was she wearing black lace? Must have been laundry day.

  “Someone’s obviously trying to lure you to Grove County,” Anthony said. “Don’t go.”

  “Can we talk traps after caffeine?”

  His lips pressed into a disapproving line. “Okay. Caffeine first.”

  He had recently begun cultivating a pencil mustache that Leticia McIntyre generously described as “the Ricky Ricardo.” Her husband, Lucas, had said, “It makes you look like a fucking beaner.” Which had led to yet another fistfight. But Anthony’s black eye was healing great. Elise could barely even tell he was injured anymore.

  The coffee tasted like burned paper, but she decided to be grateful that this motel actually had in-room coffee. The last two hadn’t, and those had been two very long weeks.

  Elise tossed back the first eight ounces and poured the next.

  “All right,” she said, wiggling back to sit on the counter. “It’s a trap. That’s obvious. Why do I care?”

  Anthony pulled on a pair of oil-stained jeans. “Why do you care?”

  “Don’t just repeat my questions.”

  “Lucas told me everything. He wanted to know why Lucinde Ramirez’s name got you interested.” He tugged a shirt over his head, letting the hem fall over his abs. “You know as well as I do that there’s no way Lucinde Ramirez has gone missing in Grove County.”

  There were a lot of people that Elise had failed to save in her career as a demon hunter. And her memory was excellent now that she had died and returned as a demon. She remembered every single failure with crystal clarity.

  Lucinde Ramirez was one of those failures: a five year old girl whose stepmother, Marisa, had offered her soul to a demon. Lucinde had been dying of a heart defect, and Marisa had hoped that possession would save her life. When Elise had killed the master demon, the girl hadn’t survived.

  Five years old. She’d had glossy black ringlets and a stuffed rabbit.

  “She would have been nine this year,” Elise said, tracing her finger around the rim of the coffee cup. Her nails were black today. She hadn’t painted them.

  “But she’s dead,” Anthony said.

  Elise suppressed her annoyance. “Yes. I know.”

  “I feel like I’m going in circles here.” He shoved a hand in her face, ticking off one finger at a time. “She’s dead. Someone’s using her name to get you to Grove County. It’s a trap.” He spoke slowly, patronizingly, as if she were a five year old herself.

  “The question is, who?” Elise asked, pushing his hand away. “Who’s placing the trap? Who’s got the balls to summon me now?”

  “Maybe Death’s Hand,” Anthony said.

  Death’s Hand was the demon that had possessed Lucinde. To be fair, it wouldn’t be the first time that Death’s Hand had returned from the dead to ruin Elise’s day. But she was confident that she had destroyed that demon on her second try. Elise had paid a high price for that kill.

  “I don’t think so. This isn’t her style.” She stood, shedding her underwear. “Laundry?”

  “Here.” Anthony grabbed a trash bag from beside the door and tossed it to her.

  She didn’t bother with much of a wardrobe anymore. There were a couple clean pairs of underwear, a pair of jeans, a couple shirts, some leggings. Elise donned the first outfit that she laid hands on and kicked the rest of it under the bed. “Will you check out of the motel for me?”

  He folded his arms across his chest, making his biceps bulge. “You’re not invulnerable.”

  “Actually…” Elise gave him a thin smile.

  “Everyone has a weakness. If someone’s asking you to pay them a visit, you can’t trust that they’re not going to be ready for you.”

  “I’ll be fine.” She buttoned her jeans. “But I take this to mean that you’re not coming.”

  “Not a fucking chance.”

  “All right.”

  Scant as her personal belongings had become,
there were two things that Anthony took to every motel for Elise: a single-edged sword with a blade two feet long, which looked like it had been cast from obsidian, and golden chains dripping with charms. Elise had been forced to remove a few of the charms when she discovered that they stung her skin—the Star of David, for instance—but the pentacles, ankhs, and various other symbols remained intact.

  She looped the chains around her neck, then shrugged into the straps of a spine sheath like a backpack. The hilt of the falchion hid neatly underneath her inky black hair.

  Anthony watched her prepare with annoyance tightening his shoulders. “We’ve had something good here. Being hired guns is good money. The tithes are great. We’ve got the McIntyres a phone call away. We haven’t seen a hybrid in an entire year. We’re as safe and settled as kopides get. I can’t believe you’re blowing it off to chase ghosts.”

  “Werewolves, Anthony. Werewolves. Maybe it’s a different Lucinde Ramirez.”

  “Do you really believe that?” Anthony asked.

  No. She didn’t.

  Elise stroked his cheek with her fingertips. Anthony wasn’t afraid of her anymore. He didn’t pull back at the contact of her skin, no matter how much it had to drive his kopis senses crazy.

  Kopides were supernaturally-strong, legendary hunters. The class had been created in ancient times to preserve the balance between angels, demons, and humans, so their senses were attuned to threats like Elise. Everything about her infernal energies could make a kopis go haywire.

  But Anthony actually leaned into her touch, putting his hand over hers.

  “I’m worried, Elise,” he said. “Lucinde Ramirez. That’s a whole other life.”

  A life that she was glad to have left behind. Her perfect memory wouldn’t let her forget any of it—all the miserable lies, betrayal, violence, and death. The people she had lost. The mistakes she had made. Hearing that name dragged her human past out of its grave like a shambling zombie. Elise had to lay that zombie to rest. She needed to know who was fucking with her.

  “Yeah,” she said, grabbing a pair of biker gloves off of the counter. “I’ll call you.”

  They embraced, but didn’t say goodbye.

  She felt, rather than saw, the sun slip behind the casino across the street. That meant it was safe for her to leave. Anthony sat on the bed again, and Elise left, stepping onto the sweltering porch outside the motel. Even at night, the oven-dry heat had a way of clinging to the city. It was smothering. Oppressive. It felt good to her demon lungs.

 

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